In Summary
- Founded in 2014, Andela built a Pan-African model that trains software engineers and integrates them into global companies across 135 countries.
- Backed by investors such as the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and SoftBank Vision Fund 2, the company reached a valuation exceeding $1.5 billion by 2021.
- With over 110,000 trained technologists and operations across 49 African nations, Andela contributes an estimated 15 percent of the continent’s active engineering workforce.
Deep Dive!!
Lagos, Nigeria, Sunday, October 26 – The evolution of Africa’s digital economy has given rise to a few companies whose impact extends far beyond commercial success. Among them, Andela stands as a defining example of what deliberate talent development and Pan-African collaboration can achieve. Conceived in 2014 by a team that included Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, the company introduced a structured pathway for identifying, training, and integrating African software engineers into the global technology workforce.
At its core, Andela was designed to address a structural imbalance in the global shortage of engineering talent and the underutilization of skilled professionals across Africa. By creating a remote-first model that connected African developers to international firms, Andela provided a sustainable solution grounded in economic inclusion and regional integration. Its selection process with less than 1% acceptance at inception ensured that only top-tier candidates advanced through its intensive training system. Within a decade, that model evolved into a global network spanning 135 countries, with over 110,000 technologists and clients such as GitHub, ViacomCBS, and Coursera.
The company’s path reflects a blend of social innovation and strategic investment. In 2016, Andela attracted a $24 million Series B round led by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, marking one of Silicon Valley’s most visible endorsements of an African enterprise. Subsequent rounds, including a $200 million Series E led by SoftBank Vision Fund 2, pushed its valuation beyond $1.5 billion by 2021. Today, Andela’s presence extends across 49 African countries and contributes to an estimated 15 percent of the continent’s active engineering workforce.
More than a startup, Andela became a Pan-African institution proving that Africa’s greatest resource is not extractive but intellectual. Its success under Aboyeji’s early leadership signaled a turning point in how African innovation is perceived globally. Not as peripheral participation, but as a central contribution to the digital economy.
Early Life, Education, and Experience
Iyinoluwa Samuel Aboyeji was born on March 28, 1991, in Lagos, Nigeria, into a middle-class family that prioritized education, discipline, and faith. His father, a civil servant, and his mother, an administrator, fostered an environment where learning and public service were held in equal regard. This early balance between intellectual rigor and social responsibility shaped his later insistence that entrepreneurship in Africa must serve both profit and purpose.
He attended Loyola Jesuit College, Abuja, a top-performing secondary school known for its structured Jesuit discipline and its record of producing some of Nigeria’s most globally minded scholars. Loyola Jesuit was a training ground in ethics, leadership, and civic consciousness. The school’s service-based ethos instilled in Aboyeji the belief that leadership should be rooted in societal contribution, a philosophy that would later influence the mission orientation behind Andela.
In 2007, at the age of 16, Aboyeji gained admission to the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada one of the world’s top universities for technology and entrepreneurship. Waterloo’s co-operative education model, which integrates classroom study with practical work placements, exposed him to Canada’s dynamic startup ecosystem. During his time there, he developed an interest in how technology could bridge social and educational divides. He completed his Bachelor’s degree in Legal Studies in 2012, but his most formative experiences came from his engagement with entrepreneurial networks across the Waterloo innovation corridor.
While still an undergraduate, Aboyeji co-founded Bookneto, a collaborative online learning platform that enabled instructors to manage, distribute, and track digital course materials. Bookneto’s success within Canadian universities attracted attention from Desire2Learn (now D2L), a major player in North American educational technology. The company later acquired Bookneto, marking Aboyeji’s first successful exit before his 22nd birthday. The experience gave him critical operational insight into building scalable learning infrastructure, managing investor relations, and adapting technology for institutional use all of which became foundational elements in his later ventures.
After graduation, he returned to Nigeria to explore how the lessons of North America’s startup ecosystem could be adapted to African contexts. This led to the creation of Fora, an online education platform designed to deliver university-level courses from international institutions to African learners. While Fora faced structural limitations including low broadband penetration and limited investor confidence in African edtech the experience became instructive. Aboyeji saw that Africa’s challenge was not merely access to education but access to employment pathways that converted learning into livelihood.
That realization shaped his next move. In 2013, while exploring solutions to the continent’s talent drain, Aboyeji met Jeremy Johnson, an American entrepreneur and co-founder of 2U. Their shared belief that Africa’s young, educated population represented an untapped global workforce led to the conception of Andela in 2014. Aboyeji’s exposure to two vastly different innovation environments Waterloo’s structured experimentation and Nigeria’s resource-constrained ingenuity uniquely positioned him to design an institution that could translate African talent into global opportunity.
By the time Andela began operations in Lagos, Aboyeji had already assembled a practical understanding of technology-enabled education, startup operations, and cross-continental partnerships. His early experience established a pattern of combining mission-driven entrepreneurship with structural problem-solving, an approach that would define both his leadership at Andela and his later ventures in financial technology.

Inspiration to Start Andela
By 2013, Iyinoluwa Aboyeji had reached a critical insight after his experience with Bookneto and Fora. Africa did not lack educated youth but it lacked structured access to global opportunity. Across the continent, millions of young people were completing university programs in science, technology, and engineering, yet few found work that matched their skills. The mismatch between talent and employment, particularly in the digital sector, represented both a human tragedy and a business opportunity.
At the same time, global demand for software developers was surging. Research from Evans Data Corporation estimated that the world required more than 26 million professional developers by 2022, while Africa contributed only a fraction of that workforce. Aboyeji realized that the problem was not skill scarcity but visibility African talent was underrepresented in global hiring networks. He envisioned a company that could formalize training, build credibility through partnerships, and link African engineers directly with employers abroad.
This idea matured during conversations with Jeremy Johnson, co-founder of the U.S.-based edtech firm 2U, and Nadayar Enegesi, a Nigerian software developer Aboyeji had worked with at Fora. Together with Christina Sass, an education specialist with experience at the Clinton Global Initiative, and Brice Nkengsa, a Cameroonian engineer, they shaped what would become Andela. The name, derived from a Swahili word meaning “to shine light,” reflected their ambition to illuminate Africa’s potential in global technology.
Aboyeji’s driving philosophy was clear that Africa’s greatest export should be human capital, not natural resources. In his early interviews, he described Andela as “an institution that proves brilliance is evenly distributed, but opportunity is not.” He wanted to build a Pan-African company that would professionalize local talent while countering the continent’s historical patterns of intellectual underemployment.
The founders set out to design a model that combined technical education with global work placement. Aboyeji’s insight was that African engineers could meet world-class standards if given structured mentorship and real commercial exposure. Unlike traditional training institutions, Andela would pay its fellows while they learned a decision that made it accessible to candidates from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds. This approach turned training into employment and learning into production.
The concept aligned perfectly with broader Pan-African ideals. Aboyeji often argued that digital infrastructure could unify Africa in ways that colonial-era borders had fragmented it. By establishing Andela hubs in Lagos, Nairobi, Kampala, and Kigali, the team operationalized this belief proving that African collaboration could create scalable, exportable products for global consumption.
In essence, Andela was born out of both necessity and vision. It was a response to structural unemployment and a statement of confidence in Africa’s intellectual capacity. For Aboyeji, it was a continental experiment in equality, an attempt to show that when African talent is trained, trusted, and connected, it can compete on merit anywhere in the world.

What Problem Andela Solves
At its core, Andela was created to address one of the most persistent contradictions in the global labor market. While the world suffers a chronic shortage of qualified software developers, Africa remains home to one of the youngest and fastest-growing populations of educated but underemployed youth. This imbalance between surplus talent and limited access to opportunity became the foundation of Andela’s business model.
By 2014, global research firms such as Evans Data Corporation estimated the world’s software developer population at about 18.5 million, with demand projected to exceed 26 million by 2022. At the same time, Africa’s youth unemployment rate averaged over 12%, with graduate unemployment particularly severe in technology-related fields. Across Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, and Uganda, surveys by the World Bank and the African Development Bank showed that employers consistently cited “lack of practical experience” as the main barrier to hiring young engineers. Andela emerged as a bridge between these two broken systems, a solution that would make African talent visible, credible, and commercially valuable on a global scale.
The company’s model approached the problem on three interconnected levels: education, employment, and enterprise integration.
- Education: Andela built an intensive technical training system combining global engineering standards with localized mentorship. Participants, known as “fellows,” spent months in structured learning programs focused on software development, agile methodologies, and communication for remote work. The company invested heavily in both technical instruction and soft skills, preparing engineers not just to code but to operate as full members of international teams.
- Employment: Unlike conventional training platforms, Andela paid its fellows from day one. This model recognized that financial access determines who can afford to learn, ensuring that selection was based on skill, not socioeconomic privilege. By treating learning as work, Andela made education financially sustainable for its participants while meeting global demand for affordable engineering capacity.
- Enterprise Integration: After training, engineers were placed with client companies, often in the United States and Europe. These placements were long-term and full-time, not freelance. Clients such as GitHub, ViacomCBS, Coursera, and Cloudflare relied on Andela engineers as core members of their development teams. The company’s internal data showed that Andela-trained developers maintained an 80%+ retention rate within client firms, demonstrating both technical competence and adaptability.
Beyond bridging individual employment, Andela addressed macroeconomic inefficiencies. It helped retain skilled Africans within the continent’s digital ecosystem while channeling foreign income into local economies. The company’s remote-first infrastructure meant that engineers living in Lagos, Kigali, or Nairobi could earn global-standard salaries without emigrating. In practice, this reversed the dynamics of “brain drain” by enabling “brain export.”
Andela also contributed to formalizing Africa’s role in the global technology value chain. Before its emergence, multinational companies largely viewed Africa as a consumer market. Through Andela’s structured recruitment and performance systems, these same companies began to see Africa as a source of production and innovation. The shift was measurable: by 2025, Andela had trained and connected more than 110,000 technologists, representing 15 percent of Africa’s estimated engineering population. Its presence across 49 African countries further underscored its Pan-African reach and influence.
In essence, Andela solved two problems at once which are the global shortage of engineering talent and Africa’s underemployment of capable graduates. It redefined the continent’s participation in the knowledge economy, turning what had been perceived as a demographic burden into a strategic advantage.

Milestones Achieved to Date
Since its launch in 2014, Andela has established itself as one of Africa’s most influential technology organizations, a rare case of a Pan-African company that scaled globally while keeping its African identity at the core. Founded in Lagos by Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, Jeremy Johnson, Christina Sass, Nadayar Enegesi, and Brice Nkengsa, the company began with just four developers selected from more than seven hundred applicants. This small experiment in Lagos became the foundation of a new model for identifying and training African engineers capable of delivering at world-class standards.
In 2015, Andela raised a $10 million Series A round led by Spark Capital with participation from TLcom Capital, which enabled its first major expansion beyond Nigeria. The company opened its Nairobi office the same year, increasing its training capacity and building stronger partnerships with U.S. technology companies. By 2016, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative had led a $24 million Series B investment, marking a global endorsement of Andela’s mission to unlock Africa’s human potential. The funding allowed Andela to establish additional operations in Uganda and Rwanda, creating a Pan-African network of engineering campuses that attracted talent from more than twenty African countries.
Growth accelerated between 2017 and 2019 as Andela shifted from a training-only model to a distributed engineering organization supplying remote teams to global companies. The company crossed the 500-engineer mark and served more than 200 clients across North America and Europe. In 2019, Andela raised $100 million in Series D funding led by Generation Investment Management, achieving a valuation exceeding $1 billion. This milestone placed Andela among Africa’s unicorns and funded the transition toward a fully remote talent network.
The year 2021 marked another inflection point with a $200 million Series E round led by SoftBank Vision Fund 2, bringing Andela’s valuation to about $1.5 billion. This financing supported the company’s move from a Pan-African focus to a truly global talent marketplace, enabling it to onboard engineers from over sixty countries. By this stage, Andela’s community had grown to more than 150,000 technologists representing forty-nine African nations.
By 2024, Andela’s model had matured into an adaptive hiring platform that connected companies with vetted technical talent worldwide. A Forrester-commissioned Total Economic Impact study reported that firms using Andela achieved a 97 percent ROI over three years, reduced time-to-hire by 66 percent, and accelerated project delivery by one-third. These findings quantified what the company had long argued that African and emerging-market engineers could outperform traditional hiring models on efficiency and value.
During the same year, Andela strengthened its leadership and partnerships. In August 2024, the company appointed Carrol Chang, former Head of Operations at Uber, as CEO to lead its next growth phase. In November, Andela joined the Microsoft Partner Network to expand global access to cloud-based jobs, and soon after partnered with the Cloud Native Computing Foundation to train 20,000 African technologists in advanced cloud-native development over three years. These partnerships reinforced Andela’s standing as both a technology company and a talent infrastructure for Africa’s digital economy.
In early 2025, Andela joined the Amazon Web Services Partner Network, deepening its cloud integration and positioning its engineers for large-scale enterprise projects. Mid-year, it partnered with Emergence AI to upskill developers in next-generation agentic AI systems, one of the earliest initiatives of its kind in Africa. By September 2025, a new collaboration with GitHub had already trained 200 technologists in AI coding skills, with plans to reach 3,000 by the end of the year. At this point, Andela reported a network of over 170,000 technologists across 179 countries, solidifying its identity as a truly global talent marketplace rooted in Pan-African ideals.
Over a decade since its founding, Andela has raised more than $330 million in venture funding, partnered with the world’s most influential technology organizations, and maintained one of the most gender-inclusive developer communities on the continent with women accounting for roughly a third of its active engineers. These milestones collectively tell the story of a company that began as a Nigerian experiment and evolved into a Pan-African institution, proving that Africa’s human capital can compete and excel on the global technology stage.
Lessons for Other Entrepreneurs
The evolution of Andela provides not just inspiration but a clear framework for what it takes to build a Pan-African company with global relevance. Each stage of its journey reflects strategic choices that other founders across the continent can learn from.
1. Invest in people before profit.
Andela’s foundation was built on a simple conviction that Africa’s greatest resource is its people. The company began by training software engineers before it had a clear revenue model, a rare move in an ecosystem often pressured by quick returns. This early investment in human capital created long-term equity, positioning Andela as both an education and employment infrastructure. For other entrepreneurs, the lesson is clear, value creation in Africa begins with capacity building, not immediate monetization.
2. Build credibility through structure and governance.
From its early years, Andela operated with financial transparency and institutional discipline, meeting international standards for reporting and compliance. These systems gave investors confidence and attracted backing from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, SoftBank, and Generation Investment Management. Many African startups underestimate the impact of clean governance on investor trust. Andela proved that reliability and operational rigor are as important as innovation when seeking global partnerships.
3. Adapt your model to scale.
Andela’s shift from a training fellowship to a global talent marketplace was not accidental; it was a strategic response to the limits of physical training capacity. By adopting a fully remote model, the company was able to scale from hundreds to hundreds of thousands of engineers across 179 countries. The lesson is that African entrepreneurs must be flexible enough to redesign their models as markets evolve. Rigid structures limit growth; adaptive ones drive it.
4. Build global networks while remaining rooted in Africa.
Even as Andela expanded into Latin America and Eastern Europe, it never abandoned its African core. Its partnerships with Microsoft, AWS, GitHub, and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation positioned African engineers within global innovation pipelines while still strengthening local ecosystems. For founders, this balance of global relevance without local detachment is the essence of Pan-African business strategy.
5. Leverage partnerships as accelerators, not crutches.
Every major phase of Andela’s growth has been driven by partnerships that complemented its internal capacity from venture capital funding to technical collaborations. However, the company maintained operational independence and a clear brand identity, avoiding the dependency trap that weakens many startups. Entrepreneurs can learn to use partnerships as catalysts for scale rather than substitutes for vision.
6. Measure impact, not only profit.
By 2024, independent studies such as the Forrester TEI report quantified Andela’s contribution to efficiency and ROI for client companies. This commitment to measurable impact helped the firm justify its value beyond financial statements. African entrepreneurs should adopt similar data-backed storytelling to shift investor perception from risk to reliability.
7. Leadership transitions are part of sustainable growth.
When Iyinoluwa Aboyeji stepped down as CEO and later when Carrol Chang was appointed in 2024, Andela demonstrated maturity in leadership continuity, a rare practice in African startups. It showed that institutional strength must outlive founding personalities. Future founders should build organizations that can function and thrive beyond their direct involvement.
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